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The advertisement reads: "We struck up a conversation about chemotherapy and insurance premiums. You spoke of your ailment of having Crohn's disease and I spoke of my battle with breast cancer ."

The man was 'slightly taller', says Diane, with a sleeve tattoo.

The Craigslist advert details the meeting that the two shared (Image: Craigslist)

"While we were talking, I began to tear up while informing you that my prognosis was elevated to stage 3 and that stage 4 means terminal. You were very attentive and held my hand as I explained my fears about it."

The conversation moved to parking, and the gentlemen told Diane that he'd send her a text of what the garage he used looks like.

She goes on that when she arrived home: "As I set my phone down on my counter, suddenly it vibrated to an unknown number's text."

She makes light of what she saw when she opened the message.

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"When I opened up the text in my in my condo which had dim lighting at the time, I saw a beautiful r** appear on my phone's screen. The glow shined on my face and penetrated my spirit. I really felt it change me.

"Even though you had not shared your name previously, I knew the d*** I was viewing had belonged to you because I had recognised your hand."

The unnamed man didn't think twice about sending a seriously ill woman an image of his penis (Image: Getty)

She jokes that she was thrilled at the arrival of yet four more similar images, and assorted insightful texts, including: "Hey", "You there?", and "Want more?"

Diane gives the excuse that she dropped her phone down the loo and lost his number - but she really wants to get hold of him now after she went to the hospital for another round of chemo.

"My doctor came in shortly [and said] 'You don't have breast cancer anymore. You are cured.'"

"That's impossible, I was stage 3 last week," Diane says she told the doctor. "The only thing that changed was that a man sent me a series of d*** pics to my phone."

Diane adds: "It was here my doctor put his hand on my shoulder and gave it to me straight: 'That was not a man. That was an angel, my lady. And often times God sends angels to do that because he knows what makes us happy'."

At this very moment, Diane adds, another doctor chimed in.

"'I'm a professional doctor of cancer too and he is right. You see your phone gives off a tiny amount of radiation. When you glanced at those pictures, they in a sense delivered a lethal dose of it to your cancer and killed it completely. Forever.

Diane's advertisement takes issue with the man who thought he was allowed to send her images of his penis (Image: Getty Images)

"The pictures of a penis provide the exact amount of radiation needed due to the peach hue emitted by the phone's screen."

Diane's hilarious ad, intended to question the man who thought sending a seriously ill woman nude pictures of himself was acceptable, ends with the sign-off: "You are my hero and guardian angel."

Earlier this summer, a woman from Manchester was banned from Facebook after she raised concerns about a man sending her unsolicited nude photos .

Media analysis executive Samantha Mawdsley decided to take matters into her own hands in a brilliant sequence of photos and messages - but she quickly found herself banned for reacting to the stranger's unwanted and anatomical photo.